Envisioning Nepal 2030: Proceedings of the International Seminar

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Envisioning Nepal 2030: Proceedings of the International Seminar GOVERNMENT OF NEPAL NATIONAL PLANNING COMMISSION Envisioning Nepal 2030 PROCEEDINGS OF THE INTERNATIONAL SEMINAR The views expressed in this report are the views of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the Asian Development Bank (ADB), or its Board of Directors or the governments they represent. ADB does not guarantee the source, originality, accuracy, completeness or reliability of any statement, information, data, finding, interpretation, advice, opinion, or view presented, nor does it make any representation concerning the same. Envisioning Nepal 2030 PROCEEDINGS OF THE INTERNATIONAL SEMINAR GOVERNMENT OF NEPAL NATIONAL PLANNING COMMISSION ENVISIONING NEPAL 2030 : PROCEEDINGS OF THE INTERNATIONAL SEMINAR Abstract National Planning Commission has undertaken to develop Nepal’s long term Development Strategy, 2030 that will serve as a guideline for Nepal’s graduation from Least Developed Country status by 2022, achieving the Sustainable Development Goals in the post-Millennium Development Goals era, and becoming a middle-income country by 2030. This report provides a general direction for this strategy based on the recommendations made by esteemed scholars, academics, and development practitioners who participated in the one-day high-level international seminar organized by National Planning Commission in collaboration with Asian Development Bank on 28 March 2016. III ENVISIONING NEPAL 2030 : PROCEEDINGS OF THE INTERNATIONAL SEMINAR Preface The last half-century of government-led visioning exercises and implementation of periodic develop- ment plans and activities have yielded notable progress in Nepal’s socioeconomic development process. Especially, over the past decade, we have successfully lifted a substantial number of people out of pov- erty, achieved most of the Millennium Development Goals, and made significant progress in human development. Yet, much remains to be done. Nepal stands at a challenging juncture at the moment. We are now looking forward to graduating from the Least Developed Country category, becoming a middle-income country, and achieving the Sus- tainable Development Goals by 2030. The country is still recovering from the massive earthquake that struck last April. While still going through the aftershocks of the earthquake, the country was struck by a four-month long damaging economic blockade—one that caused a bigger injury to the economy than the earthquake—that pushed many people back into poverty. Therefore, there are immense chal- lenges to overcome on the way to achieving the goals that Nepal has set for itself over the next fifteen years. Having said that, the promulgation of the new Constitution of Nepal signifies a massive victory for the Nepali people. The Constitution has enshrined the goals of perpetual peace, prosperity and equitable development, and good governance, and guaranteed fundamental rights of food, education, health, etc. to the people. The Constitution thus lends an impetus to setting out, once again, and strongly than ever before, an endeavor of socioeconomic transformation of the country, fulfilling in the process, the goals that Nepal has set for itself, and the hopes and aspirations of thirty million Nepali citizens. All Nepal needs now is a clearly laid-out long-term roadmap for inclusive development. This international seminar ‘Envisioning Nepal 2030’ is the first engagement with the international devel- opment experts, development partners, policy makers, and representatives of civil society organizations— all with decades of experience—in a bid to formulate the long-term roadmap. During this strategic visioning exercise, we reflected back on our past experiences and scrutinized all plans and actions we had implemented so far. From the international experts, we sought lessons on how they went about building long-term plans for their respective countries, their success and failure stories, and the contemporary global political-economic paradigm. Together, we identified the challenges and opportunities for Nepal as we go forward, and discussed how we could position ourselves in the global picture to reap the benefits of the contemporary trends and achieve a fast-paced and sustainable inclusive growth. This report is a compilation of the discussions that took place during the day-long strategic exercise. And, this is only the first initiative and there will be more of such in the coming months. After a se- ries of such engagements with the stakeholders, we will have broadly identified the areas of strategic priority for Nepal. These will further serve as the building blocks for Nepal’s long-term development vision. The inputs from the national and international experts will be incorporated as we build an implementation action plan. Throughout the process, we will have to ensure that what comes as an output of these series of exercises are implementable, and that it holds the capacity to bring about the socioeconomic transformation and all- round development that the Nepali people are eagerly looking forward to. For that we will have to, on the one hand, make sure that the plans are clear and concrete, and on the other, have sufficient human and fi- nancial resources, and technical and managerial expertise to effectively implement them. In order to achieve all these, we will require commitments and continuous support from all stakeholders including government agencies, development partners, the private sector, the cooperative sector, and the civil society. Dr. Yuba Raj Khatiwada Vice Chairman, National Planning Commission IV ENVISIONING NEPAL 2030 : PROCEEDINGS OF THE INTERNATIONAL SEMINAR Preface With its recently promulgated Constitution, Nepal is progressing towards political and social stability, which is a foundation of long-term economic development. Nepal has made its intentions of develop- ment clear by setting goals of graduating from the Least Development Country status and by signing up to the achievement of Sustainable Development Goals by 2030. Nepal is now to formulate a clear vision that can lead the country to undergo rapid socioeconomic transformation to become a prosper- ous middle-income country. The Asian Development Bank (ADB), a long-standing partner in Nepal’s development initiatives, welcomes the Government of Nepal’s commitment to equitable development and growth. ADB is honored to be given a role of supporting the government in envisioning Nepal’s development strategy. Experiences of Asia’s remarkable progress in economic growth and poverty reduction over the past 50 years demonstrate the need for setting out clear and visionary pathways for achieving the country’s socioeconomic goals, and the active roles played by the state to implement the strategy. Nepal can also learn from the experiences of successful countries in terms of accelerating broad-based economic growth, generating agriculture transformation, and moving towards developing an industrial base by attracting foreign and domestic investments that are focused on creating jobs for the Nepali people. Furthermore, Nepal is fortunate to have regional cooperation and integration with the rapidly growing neighboring economies, which can be a bedrock of Nepal’s development strategy. “Envisioning Nepal 2030” is an exercise taken up by the National Planning Commission (NPC) to de- velop time-bound and realistic development vision and strategies that are actionable. ADB commends the Government’s intention and efforts in this endeavor. This report brings together the rich discussions of the one-day seminar organized by NPC on 28 March 2016. The seminar was a gathering of sector experts, leading economic reform champions, and development practitioners from the region, and a wide range of stakeholders from Nepal. Renowned international and national experts presented ideas and experiences of successful economic reforms and transformation in Asia. Eminent local panel discussants pointed out the contexts, realities, and challenges of reforms in Nepal. Overall, the seminar discussions provided ample and valuable inputs for taking the process forward for formulating Envisioning Nepal 2030 that can respond to global and regional paradigms while transforming Nepal’s socioeconomic development realities. ADB believes that a fruitful process has been initiated and that this report marks the beginning of framing a long-term dynamic development strategy that can adapt to changing realities. ADB is com- mitted to partner with the government in facilitating this process further and will endeavor to support the NPC, in collaboration with other development partners, in the path that it has set forward. Wencai Zhang Vice President Asian Development Bank V ENVISIONING NEPAL 2030 : PROCEEDINGS OF THE INTERNATIONAL SEMINAR Preface The Envisioning Nepal 2030 Seminar is an endeavor of the National Planning Commission (NPC) to chart Nepal’s long-term development strategy. With the promulgation of the Constitution of Nepal— in which are enshrined the goals of perpetual peace, development and prosperity, good governance, and social justice to ensure equitable development—and the country’s prior commitments to graduate from the Least Developed Country category, become a prosperous middle-income country by 2030, and achieve the Sustainable Development Goals 2030, Nepal is gearing up for a major socioeconomic transformation. This requires that Nepal proceed with a clear long-term development roadmap, which is further supplemented by a focused and implementable plan of action. This seminar is
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